"The SheBelieves was my big moment, my big breakthrough. We had to get on that platform, hold that trophy, and have that medal around our necks."
"I won the league at Middlesbrough with Manchester United, and I wore my medal for the next two or three days because I thought, 'I want this again - and the best want it again and again'."
"The common vision is winning - and winning a World Cup. We have a three-year plan - win the World Cup, win the Olympics, win the Euros - and the common agreement is you want to create a legacy and win the World Cup; then, everything else falls into place."
"I didn't win a trophy with Everton, but that time is just as special as my playing career at United."
"People leave United and tend to drift out of the game. I actually think I became a better player and a better person. I proved a lot of doubters wrong."
"It's a great club, Everton. You don't just go there to work; you have to be part of the family."
"I love positivity. I'm always saying, 'Well done' - maybe too often, in fact."
"It's our English mentality to worry about the weather."
"As a manager, you can only worry about those who can get on the bus, and those are the fit ones. Injuries and illnesses mean opportunities for others."
"I have got two paths - one to go into the media, the other to go into coaching and management. I have got offers from both."
"The biggest thing I will miss is 4 July when Everton are due back for pre-season training. I loved that day. I lived for it, getting back with the lads."
"There's no shortcut to being a manager or coach."
"To be a manager, you've got to gamble. Be brave, be bold, but be humble in everything that you do, and from the kit man to the physio to your best player to your youngest player, make sure you treat everybody the same."
"People make a big thing about rankings, but being first or second in the world doesn't mean much if you don't actually win anything."
"Rankings aren't that important to me. I want a winners' medal."
"One of the main things I said in my job interview was that I want to develop female coaches."
"I want to widen the pool. In the past, England players have maybe had the comfort of knowing what the next squad is going to be before it's announced, but I'd like there to be more uncertainty. More competition for places means the standard goes up."
"When you come up against a big, powerful football nation, you are playing against history. When you talk about street football, you are talking about South American players who have grown up with nothing."
"It's part of the captain's job to keep people on their toes."
"When I'm retired, I want to be able to tell my kids I played in a European Cup final. I don't want to have to say I watched one from the substitutes' bench, then kept getting knocked out in the quarters and semis."
"I'll definitely play cricket again, but only socially. I've still got a lot of friends at my local team, Green Mount, and I do miss playing, but I don't regret anything."
"I played for England at cricket and football. Playing at Wembley in front of 60,000 people seemed better than playing at Cirencester in front of my family and friends."
"I know every part of their lives. I know about their animals; if they've got a dog, I know its name. My players love their dogs. I know about their partners; I know if they go to the cinema - it's the detail you need to be successful. If they have an ice cream, I know about it."
"Modern-day coaching is about relationships, so I need to know every little thing that will make my players tick. How am I going to get more out of our best players, from Fran Kirby, Lucy Bronze? Lucy wants to be challenged. If you tell her she can't do something, she'll try it."
"I always want and expect more from players; they need challenging."